Extended Anticoagulant Treatment with Full- or Reduced-Dose Apixaban in Patients with Cancer-Associated Venous Thromboembolism: Rationale and Design of the API-CAT Study

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Mahé, Isabelle | Agnelli, Giancarlo | Ay, Cihan | Bamias, Aristotelis | Becattini, Cecilia | Carrier, Marc | Chapelle, Céline | Cohen, Alexander | Girard, Philippe | Huisman, Menno | Klok, Frederikus | López-Núñez, Juan | Maraveyas, Anthony | Mayeur, Didier | Mir, Olivier | Monreal, Manuel | Righini, Marc | Samama, Charles | Syrigos, Kostas | Szmit, Sebastian | Torbicki, Adam | Verhamme, Peter | Vicaut, Eric | Wang, Tzu-Fei | Meyer, Guy | Laporte, Silvy

Edité par CCSD ; Schattauer -

International audience. Abstract Cancer-associated thrombosis (CT) is associated with a high risk of recurrent venous thromboembolic (VTE) events that require extended anticoagulation in patients with active cancer, putting them at risk of bleeding. The aim of the API-CAT study (NCT03692065) is to assess whether a reduced-dose regimen of apixaban (2.5 mg twice daily [bid]) is noninferior to a full-dose regimen of apixaban (5 mg bid) for the prevention of recurrent VTE in patients with active cancer who have completed ≥6 months of anticoagulant therapy for a documented index event of proximal deep-vein thrombosis and/or pulmonary embolism. API-CAT is an international, randomized, parallel-group, double-blind, noninferiority trial with blinded adjudication of outcome events. Consecutive patients are randomized to receive apixaban 2.5 or 5 mg bid for 12 months. The primary efficacy outcome is a composite of recurrent symptomatic or incidental VTE during the treatment period. The principal safety endpoint is clinically relevant bleeding, defined as a composite of major bleeding or nonmajor clinically relevant bleeding. Assuming a 12-month incidence of the primary outcome of 4% with apixaban and an upper limit of the two-sided 95% confidence interval of the hazard ratio <2.0, 1,722 patients will be randomized, assuming an up to 10% loss in total patient-years (β = 80%; α one-sided = 0.025). This trial has the potential to demonstrate that a regimen of extended treatment for patients with CT beyond an initial 6 months, with a reduced apixaban dose, has an acceptable risk of recurrent VTE recurrence and decreases the risk of bleeding.

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